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Lagrangian Photochemical Modeling of Ozone Formation and Aerosol Evolution in Biomass Burning Plumes: Toward a Sub-grid Scale Parameterization
M.J. Alvarado1 ([email protected]), R.J. Yokelson2, S.K. Akagi2, I.R. Burling2, E. Fischer3, G.R. McMeeking3, K. Travis4, J.S. Craven5, J.H. Seinfeld5, J.W. Taylor6, H.
Coe6, S.P. Urbanski7, C.E. Wold7, and D.R. Weise7
1Atmospheric and Environmental Research (AER) 2University of Montana 3Colorado State University 4Harvard University 5California Institute of Technology
6University of Manchester 7USDA Forest Service
2013 CMAS Conference
October 30, 2013
Copyright 2013, Government sponsorship acknowledged.
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Species % of Atm. Source(Andreae & Merlet, 1999 and IPCC,
2001)
CO ~17%
CH4 ~3.5%
NOx ~16%
OC 12% - 45%
BC 12% - 28%
• Large global source of trace gases and particles
• Emissions highly variable between fires
• About half of organic compounds in smoke are unidentified (e.g., SVOCs)
• Rapid near-source chemistry creates O3, PAN, SOA, etc.
• Understanding this chemistry is critical to assessing air quality and climate impacts.
Biomass Burning Impacts Air Quality and ClimateAnnual carbon emissions (as g C m-2 year-1), averaged over 1997-2009, derived using MODIS fire counts and burned area.
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Aerosol Simulation Program (ASP v2.0)ASP (Alvarado and Prinn, 2009) models the formation of O3 and SOA in smoke plumes. Gas-phase chemistry
o ≤C4 gases follow MCM v3.2 (Saunders et al., 2003).
o Other organic gases follow RACM2 (Goliff et al., 2013).
Inorganic aerosol thermodynamics OA thermodynamics using the
Volatility Basis Set (VBS) (Robinson et al., 2007).
Evolution of the aerosol size distribution and optical properties.
ASP can be run as a box model, or as a subroutine within 3D models (Alvarado et al., 2009).
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The Williams fire (burning scrublands) was sampled from 10:50-15:20 LT on November 17, 2009. Skies were clear all day and RH was low (11-26%) with variable winds (2-5 m/s).
Measurements included U. Montana airborne FTIR (CO, O3, NOx, PAN, C2H4, etc.), compact ToF-AMS (aerosol mass conc.), SP2 (BC), nephelometer, and meteorological data.
Williams fire sampling (Akagi et al., 2012)
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Significant PAN formation.
ΔO3/ΔCO increased to 10% in 4.5 hr.
• Significant formation of HCOOH and CH3COOH• ΔOA/ΔCO2 slightly decreases in 4.5 hr
(from 3.6±0.9x10-3 to 2.8±0.9x10-3)
Key Observations of Williams fire
ΔO3 = O3 in plume – background O3
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Without SVOC Chemistry, ASP performs well for O3 and PAN, as well as NOx, C2H4 and OH.
O3 (p
pb)
ΔPAN
/ΔCO
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Fast, Medium, and Slow Dilution RatesSolid = In Plume Photo, Dashed = Above Plume Photo
Smoke Age (hr) Smoke Age (hr)
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ΔCH
3CO
OH
/ΔCO
But OA and organic acids are underestimated.
Can adding reasonable SVOC chemistry help?
ΔOA/ΔCO2 (g/g)
Organic Aerosol (OA) Enhancement Ratios at 4-4.5 hr
Smoke Age (hr)
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In the 1D-VBS framework, SVOCs react with OH to produce only less volatile SVOCs:
In reality, SVOCs form RO2 radicals, which can fragment into higher volatility products, form O3, and regenerate HOx:
Adding SVOC Chemistry
SVOCi OHkOH
SVOCi nbins
SVOCi OHkOH
RO2
RO2 NO 1 SVOCi nbins SVOCi1 VOC
NO2 HO2
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Need slow OH reaction rate and/or fragmentation to explain low OA downwind
ΔOA/ΔCO2 (g/g)
kOH = 10-11 cm3/s
o HC8 in RACM2: 1.1x10-11 cm3/s
kOH = 10-11 cm3/s + 50% RO2 frago Formation of
Acetic Acid?
Organic Aerosol (OA) Enhancement Ratios at 4-4.5 hr
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Acetic acid formation consistent with formation by RO2 fragmentation
ΔCH
3CO
OH
/ΔCO
kOH = 10-11 cm3/s + 50% RO2 frag
Smoke Age (hr)
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Need to include SVOC NOx and HOx chemistry for O3, NOx, and PAN
kOH = 10-11 cm3/s, 50% of RO2 fragment, AND
1.25 O3 per rxn (vs. 1.44 for HC8) and 60% HOx recycled (vs. 58%)
Enhancement Ratios at 4-4.5 hr
ΔPAN/ΔCO2ΔNOx/ΔCO2ΔO3/ΔCO2 ΔC2H4/ΔCOΔOA/ΔCO2 (g/g)
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• Follow approach used by Vinken et al. (2011) for ship plumes
• We use ASP to build look-up tables of ΔO3/ΔCO, ΔNOx/ΔCO, ΔPAN/ΔCO, etc. versus smoke age
• Look-up table will include dependence on biome, temperature, solar zenith angle (SZA), and other fire and meteorological parameters
Using ASP to Build a Sub-grid Scale Parameterization for GEOS-Chem
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Variation with biome
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• SVOC chemistry can have a large impact on O3, PAN,
and OA in the smoke plume.
• Reasonable SVOC chemistry can simulate O3, PAN, and
OA observations from the Williams Fire.
– kOH ~10-11 cm3/s with ~50% of RO2 radicals fragmenting to produce
higher volatility SVOC + CH3COOH
– 1.25 O3 for each SVOC + OH reaction (vs 1.44 for alkanes)
– 60% of OH regenerated as HO2 (vs ~58% for alkanes)
– Provides a model-based constraint on the chemistry of the
SVOCs
• Preliminary work using ASP to develop a sub-grid
parameterization for GEOS-Chem is promising.
Conclusions
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• Using ASP to simulate smog chamber studies
• Studies of additional plumes from Yucatan, Brazil, Western US, etc.– Is SVOC chemistry
similar between plumes?
• Integration of ASP into HYSPLIT Lagrangian dispersion model driven with WRF meteorology.
Future Work
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• This modeling work funded by NSF grant AGS-1144165.
• Sampling of the Williams fire was funded by NSF grants ATM-0513055 and ATM-0936321, and by SERDP projects SI-1648 and SI-1649.
• Improvements to ASP aerosol optical properties funded by NASA ACMAP grant NNX11AN72G.
Acknowledgements
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Backup Slides
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ASP (Alvarado and Prinn, 2009) simulates the formation of ozone and secondary OA within smoke plumes. ASP calculates: Gas-phase, heterogeneous, and
aerosol-phase chemistry, Secondary inorganic and organic
aerosol, Evolution of the (sectional) aerosol
size distribution, and Aerosol optical properties.
ASP can be run as a box model, as a
subroutine within 3D models (e.g.,
Alvarado et al., 2009).
Aerosol Simulation Program (ASP v2.0)
dCqdt
4Ky
yo2 8Kyt Cq Cq
a dCqdt
chem, cond, ...
Plume modeled as a Lagrangian parcel of fixed
height and down-trajectory length but variable width y(t)
(Mason et al., 2001).
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Initial and background concentrations
from observations, literature, or
GEOS-Chem.
Observed CO used to determine best
fit and upper/lower limits for model
dilution rate.
Photolysis rates calculated offline with
TUV v5.0 (Madronich and Flocke,
1998) with smoke diluting with time.
POA volatility distribution based on
Grieshop et al., 2009.
ASP v2.0 Setup for the Williams Fire
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ΔO3/ΔCO increased to 10%
in 4.5 hr.
OH conc. of 5-6 × 106 cm-3.
No increase in OASignificant PAN formation.
Key Observations of Williams Fire
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Without SVOC Chemistry, ASP performs well for O3, NOx, PAN, C2H4 and OH.
ΔNO
x/ΔC
O2
ΔC2H
4/ΔC
O
O3 (p
pb)
ΔPAN
/ΔCO
2
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Variation with Solar Zenith Angle
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Variation with Temperature